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  • Why is damn a swear word while dang and darn arent?
    I want to know that why is damn considered a swear word while dang and darn are never considered swear words
  • What does goddamn mean exactly? - English Language Learners Stack . . .
    It means very little If someone says "I can't find the goddamn remote control", it has the same meaning as "I can't find the remote control" The curse word just indicates the speaker's frustration It comes from "God damn" - exactly as you say "damned by God", ie judged and doomed to punishment in Hell Taken literally the speaker is saying that the remote control has been (or should be
  • What does damn exactly mean in this sentence?
    Today I came across sentence which was: People are no damn good It got me into thinking that since the word "damn" has been used before "good", a noun, it should be an adjective and the only me
  • What does you better mean in this context of conversation?
    I don’t know that I’ve ever really thought about this idiom It’s very common, and yet it’s really quite a strange one! Plain meaning: “ought to” When I say that “you better” do something, I mean that it is what you ought to do There is a strong expectation that you will do it The idiom is used in reference to a verb In your example, the verb and its object (“think that
  • There is some or There are some- which is correct?
    I was at school and my teacher said There's some in there Was that phrase correct? Is it "there is some in there" or "there are some in there"?
  • future time - Will come or Will be coming - English Language . . .
    At least in British English, "I will be coming " is more polite and less decisive "I will come tomorrow" implies either that it is important or essential that I come soon, or that it is important or essential that you rearrange your plans for tomorrow so that you will be free to meet me when I come Other languages and or cultures may express this differently For example some of my
  • ’Rarely a week passes ~ ’ is grammatical without inversion?
    “It used to be said that when America sneezes, the world catches a cold, but the expression is being increasingly tailored to the rise of China *Rarely a week passes when some new phenomenon relat
  • grammar - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Can the word 'prior' be a substitute for 'earlier', that is not followed by any clarifications in expressions like 'four years prior' (and then goes a period, the sentence stops)? Like '[he did thi
  • comparison - New adjective in comparative form - English Language . . .
    There's a rule about one-syllable adjectives that end in a single vowel and a consonant, that duplicates the consonant in the comparative form: big -- gt; bigger hot -- gt; hotter I've been asking
  • pros and cons vs advantages and disadvantages
    Yes, the two terms imply the same 'Pros and cons' comes from Latin pro et contra meaning 'for and against' It actually means 'the positive and negative aspects of an argument'





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